CLASH-VLT: Strangulation of cluster galaxies in MACSJ0416.1-2403 as seen from their chemical enrichment
C. Maier (University of Vienna, Department of Astrophysics, Austria, (1)), U. Kuchner (1), B. L. Ziegler (1), M. Verdugo (1), I. Balestra (INAF,, Trieste, (2)), M. Girardi (2), A. Mercurio (INAF, Napoli), P. Rosati, (University Ferrara, Italy), A. Fritz (INAF, Milano)

TL;DR
This study investigates how cluster environment affects galaxy chemical enrichment, revealing that strangulation halts gas inflow, leading to higher metallicities in accreted galaxies, especially below a certain mass threshold.
Contribution
It provides observational evidence supporting strangulation as the main process influencing gas metallicities in cluster galaxies below 10.2 log(M/Msun).
Findings
Accreted cluster galaxies have higher metallicities than infalling ones.
Strangulation explains the elevated metallicities in low-mass cluster galaxies.
Environmental effects significantly influence gas regulation and metallicity in cluster galaxies.
Abstract
(abridged) We explore the Frontier Fields cluster MACS J0416.1-2403 at z=0.3972 with VIMOS/VLT spectroscopy from the CLASH-VLT survey covering a region which corresponds to almost three virial radii. We measure fluxes of 5 emission lines of 76 cluster members enabling us to unambiguously derive O/H gas metallicities, and also SFRs from Halpha. For intermediate massses we find a similar distribution of cluster and field galaxies in the MZR and mass vs. sSFR diagrams. Bulge-dominated cluster galaxies have on average lower sSFRs and higher O/Hs compared to their disk-dominated counterparts. We use the location of galaxies in the projected velocity vs. position phase-space to separate our cluster sample into a region of objects accreted longer time ago and a region of recently accreted and infalling galaxies. We find a higher fraction of accreted metal-rich galaxies (63%) compared to the…
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